Saturday, June 13, 2015

Boone Hall Plantation

This morning we woke up early and had a delicious hot breakfast to prepare for our big day. We headed to Boone Hall Plantation to learn more about plantation life in the Carolinas. Boone Hall is one of the most photographed plantations in America (popular from “The Notebook” and the recent nuptials of Ryan Reynolds and Blake Lively). We started off with an open air coach ride through roughly 700 acres of some of the most beautiful trees you could imagine. Since it is still a working farm, we learned about many of their crops (blueberries, strawberries, peaches, pecans, corn…about the only thing they can’t grow are apples) and the history of the plantation. The current owners are a brother/sister team that grew up in the house and the brother still lives on the plantation and oversees its operations. The tour was incredibly interesting and informative.  

Ready for our coach tour around the plantation.

Photos just can't do it justice. With the 300 year old trees and the Spanish Moss blowing in the breeze it was absolutely stunning. 

Norah loved searching for turtles as we drove!
We then headed to the butterfly gardens. This was one of the girls’ favorite spots as the butterflies swarmed them. It was very peaceful and *a little* cooler.
Grace loved when butterflies landed on her.

From there we headed to a tour of the mansion. They don’t allow photos given that the owners still occupy the 2nd and 3rd floors, but you can imagine the grandeur. You aren’t allowed to touch anything, but I could tell Grace was thinking about plunking some of the keys on the beautiful baby grand piano sitting in the library!
The thing about southern hospitality, everyone asks if you would like them to take a family picture. 

From the house tour we headed out to the Gullah Theater to hear about slave life from a woman who is Gullah Geechee. The Gullah are the descendants of enslaved Africans who live in the Lowcountry region  of South Carolina and Georgia and she taught us a little of the Gullah Geechee dialect and the meanings and hidden messages behind some of the lyrics of the most well-known songs like, “Swing Low, Sweet Chariot.” The girls liked singing along, but were being swarmed by a huge bumblebee, so they were a bit preoccupied in fear.
The presentation gave us a great opportunity to re-hydrate! It was HOT!

We headed out to the Cotton Dock (above) and then to tour the slave homes (there were 9 of them still on the property). 
Each home featured a different piece of history in regard to slavery and the emancipation proclamation, so it was really informative. Given that it was 98 degrees today, it gave the girls (and us) a whole new appreciation for working from sun-up to sun-down in the heat without sufficient food and water. Grace also just finished studying about Rosa Parks, so once the information became a bit more recent and got into information on Civil Rights, she had a lot to offer.
Each little house had a short video to explain the lives of some of the slaves who worked on the plantation in addition to information about the time.

It was a beautiful plantation, rich in history. I was worried that the girls wouldn’t be old enough to appreciate it, and the heat would be too much for them for 5 hours of “learning” in the hot sun, but they did a great job and we really enjoyed it!

Our little explorer found a few new "friends" on the plantation. She really thought this tiny toad should come home with us..."no one wants to live in a slave house."





1 comment:

Makenzie said...

SO FUN!! We were there EXACTLY two years ago!! Loved Boone Hall. We toured Ft Sumter and Ft Moultrie- I love the "living history" and the ability to walk the footsteps of the people before us. It's like a playground to me!!

Seriously digging all the fun you guys are having. Y'all look so darn cute too... I'm going to have to start coordinating outfits so family photos (even on vacation) look a whole lot better!! Love it!!